The number of coronavirus cases in the UK has reached 590 - up 134 in the last 24 hours.
X-ray images and CT scans of coronavirus patients reveal how their lungs are being ravaged by the virus and filled with a sticky mucus that prevents them from inhaling because there is no space for air.
Medical professionals around the world, from front-line staff to research scientists, are beginning to develop a solid understanding of how the novel coronavirus spreads and affects the body.
There have now been more than 4,600 deaths from the
COVID-19 disease worldwide as the
coronavirus outbreak continues to spread, with 126,000 confirmed cases globally.
An international effort to share X-ray and CT scans has helped produce a growing body of evidence which doctors can use to diagnose those most seriously affected
The CT scans of COVID-19 patients have revealed white patches in the lungs - which radiologists have called ground-glass opacities - so-called because they show up on the scans similar to ground-glass windows
Post-mortem examinations in China of individuals who have died after contracting COVID-19 have revealed that these areas are being filled with a sticky mucus that literally prevents the patient from inhaling as there is no space for the air to enter.
That is what it feels like
A new way to test for it perhaps